Waterloo EMC Services

Water­loo EMC Ser­vices provides EMC con­sult­ing ser­vices relat­ing to EMC Test­ing and Design. With more than 30 years design and test exper­i­ence, as well as in-depth involve­ment in IEC stand­ards devel­op­ment activ­it­ies, John Mow­bray brings a depth of expert­ise rarely found.

The Engin­eer­ing Expert Wit­ness Blog has the dis­tinc­tion of being one of the longest run­ning engin­eer­ing related blogs on the inter­net and is routinely used by col­lege stu­dents as a source of sup­port­ive tech­nic­al mater­i­al, includ­ing those at Penn State Uni­ver­sity and the 100 Top Resources for Elec­tric­al Engin­eers on the Elec­tric­al Engin­eer­ing Schools web­site.

The blog focuses on engin­eer­ing and oth­er tech­nic­al top­ics. Mater­i­al is presen­ted through a vari­ety of approaches, and the tech­nic­al mes­sages will some­times be peppered with car­toons to bring the mes­sage home in a humor­ous way.

The Engin­eer­ing and Tech­no­logy His­tory Wiki (ETHW) is a web­site with thou­sands of art­icles, first-hand accounts, oral his­tor­ies, mile­stones, archiv­al doc­u­ments and les­son plans per­tain­ing to the his­tory of tech­no­logy. The ETHW is one of the world’s premi­er sites for the doc­u­ment­a­tion, ana­lys­is, and explan­a­tion of the his­tory of tech­no­logy; the sci­ent­ists, engin­eers and busi­ness people who made these tech­no­lo­gies hap­pen; and on the his­tory of the organ­iz­a­tions to which these men and women belonged.

The ETHW is developed by a part­ner­ship between the United Engin­eer­ing Found­a­tion, and the AIChE, AIME, ASCE, ASME, IEEE, SPE and SWE. It fosters the cre­ation of nar­rat­ives that not only doc­u­ment the his­tory of engin­eer­ing prac­tices but also explain when, how, and why these tech­no­lo­gies developed as they did. It uses a wiki-based web plat­form to foster a col­lab­or­at­ive online envir­on­ment that taps into the col­lect­ive memor­ies, exper­i­ences, and know­ledge of engineering’s world­wide mem­ber­ship – the men and women who provide the ima­gin­a­tion, cre­ativ­ity, and know-how to sus­tain pro­gress in elec­tric­al, elec­tron­ic, and com­puter innov­a­tions. In time, this site will serve as a cent­ral his­tor­ic­al repos­it­ory of all the achieve­ments, ideas, and first-hand know­ledge of engin­eer­ing asso­ci­ation mem­bers, soci­et­ies, coun­cils and tech­nic­al com­munit­ies. The ETHW will also provide a cent­ral loc­a­tion for all mater­i­als related to engineering’s organ­iz­a­tion­al his­tory.

You may copy this con­tent, cre­ate deriv­at­ive work from it, and re-pub­lish it for non-com­mer­cial pur­poses, provided you include an overt attri­bu­tion to the author(s) and the re-pub­lic­a­tion must itself be under the terms of this license or sim­il­ar.